His medical experience tells us that hearing a neuromagnosis calls for an authoritative doctor to perform surgery and to retain a facial nerve function.

On-line workstations for Director Zhao Tianji on tumours on the base of the skull, to share the experience of treatment and the current situation of patients with neuromagnosis after surgery.

“In 2021, I had a neuromagnosis surgery in the local hospital, I had paraplegic eyes, I couldn’t shut my mouth, I had a re-examination of the re-emergence of the tumor, and my family found Director Zhao Tian Ji-ji, the country’s most authoritative expert in the operation, who said that the re-emergence still required surgery, and that the risk of a second operation was greater.

Our family was troubled by the night, we watched a dozen other major hospital professors, and it was felt that Director Zhao was more professional and highly skilled in medicine. Once again, we found Director Zhao Zianji, who was successful in surgery, which felt lighter than the first pain, faster recovery of the body, maintenance of the original neurological function and no aftereffects.

The first operation left a palpable face because of irreversible nervous damage and the absence of clean tumours, which made the operation difficult. Zhao Tin Ji-shu is highly skilled, tumours are clean and nervous functions are well protected. I personally told you that it is very important to find a good doctor, and I regret not having found Director Zhao for the first time at that time. Thank you very much for this operation, Director Zhao Tian Ji-ji, a wonderful doctor of virtue, and I am a beneficiary, sharing my experience, hoping that my fellow patient will not go astray!”

Neural tumors are the most common benign tumours in the small brain corner of the bridge, accounting for between 80 and 90 per cent of the tumours. Neural tumours account for 10 per cent of tumours within the skull, with a prevalence rate of approximately 1 100,000. In clinical terms, the main symptoms of hearing aneurysm are hearing neurosis, loss of hearing, ear ringing, etc., which requires identification with normal ear disease. According to statistics, 57 per cent of patients with hearing neuromas have an ear ringing, hearing impairment or ear symptoms; 26 per cent have sudden deafness. Therefore, when hearing abnormality occurs, the possibility of hearing a nervous tumor must not be overlooked.

In addition to ear symptoms, patients with hearing neuromagnosis may suffer from a sense of instability and balance, in the form of dizziness, nausea and vomiting, as well as eccentric irritation such as pale and sweaty.

What needs to be reminded of is that surgery is the only effective way to treat a nervous tumor. Clinically, in the absence of apparent surgical taboos, patients are generally advised to perform early surgery to avoid a loss of hearing that is difficult to recover! Therefore, it is important that patients do not resist surgery, which is in the interest of maintaining hearing. Addressing the problem of surgical trauma and the risks of surgery that patients’ friends are worried about, in fact, with the development of medical imaging, microneurological surgery, and cranial neuropsytic monitoring, which, in addition to increasing the rate of expediency, has led to an increased focus on the preservation of the neurological function and the maintenance of the quality of life after surgery, especially the protection of the facial neurons, is an important factor to be considered first and foremost by cranial surgeons and most patients in their choice of treatment.

The main objectives of the treatment of neuromagnosis are to remove tumors, to remove their oppressive effects on brain stem, small brain, and to remove the hydroplasm caused by tumors on the brain. Ideally, the best is a tumour, but the tumour cannot be fully laced with a nervous or vascular bond.